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‎08-23-2015 02:35 PM - edited ‎08-23-2015 10:47 PM
Another bit of good news from Earthjustice - two obsolete dams were taken down in southern Oregon (just southwest [sorry, southeast] of the Coos Bay area), opening Evans Creek for salmon and other fish. The dams had been in place over 75 years.
‎08-23-2015 02:37 PM
EXCELLENT!
Unfortunately, California will undo all the good other places are doing by INCREASING the number of dams they have since they (wrongly so) think the solution to their water issues is to dam up the whole state!
‎08-23-2015 03:10 PM
Regretfully, I got outvoted, @HappyDaze
Perhaps California will come to its senses. Storing surface water does not seem like the best idea when there are other options. The Sierra Club has some good points on the issue.
‎08-23-2015 05:45 PM
If you are interested in this topic, you might enjoy the Netflix movie Dam Nation. (It might be one word on Netflix.)
‎08-23-2015 06:52 PM
Woowzer.....those two dams were obsolete and hadn't been used for irrigation for years and years. No one here was opposed to removing them. The dams are no where near Coos Bay. Evans Creek flows into the Rogue River between Medford and Grants Pass. There was no opposition so therefore bragging about the removal does not favor any "side" of the environmental question. They were simply old and crumbling and the state removed them.
‎08-23-2015 10:46 PM - edited ‎08-23-2015 10:48 PM
Did you read the article?
I didn't say they were "near" Coos Bay. I said they were southeast (I had southwest - that was a mis-type) of the Coos Bay area. So why did it take so long to remove them if there was no opposition? According to the article, the "authorities" didn't do anything for a very, very long time. And now it's done. So why be cranky about it?
‎08-23-2015 11:08 PM
I don't care what the reason is that they finally did it, I am just glad they finally DID! If only they had done it earlier but I am sure politics were somehow involved. It is always is in situations like this. You'd actually be amazed at how many smaller, obsolete dams are still out there. I used to go to one as a teenager to swim with a bunch of friends. It is really a shame they haven't removed more of them as they will only help to benefit the wildlife and fish. It is all about the $$ though- they don't want to spend the money to do it.
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